listen 1 attacks the lungs and the breathing pass- ages. "To core it you need 15 et at these organs direct, Ordinar i and syrups do ne h gy, bay 39: direct 10 your som h is not ailing, Peps, on the contrary, ro direct ixtures T ot HE FOUNDATION OF INTERNA. | TIONAL POLITY, : Hera, as frequently through the feel a Mack of spifitual dis- pit, wore tuggested B¥ various phases of 'the events leading up to the pt aif war. Throughout them all -- eid they are ten io namber-- thers breathes that noble optimism that gees and recognizes Cod in every: thing. That history repeats jt-eif, fo nas of the things which 3ir. Maciel) abundantly proves. Parallal eases, Quoted from szered history, manifest the unfailing hand of God in the sel- tiément of national affairs. God moves scrogss the ages with stately step, gnd they who would understand Him huis read His records with the Heht of two eteraitlos upon them. Christ Is the ofie- who will controf. Around Him the -nations must bow OF LIVING LESS THAN THO MONTHS Ac ar Ample. Ottawa, Jan. 15.--It will be ensour- aging to Canadian householdérs to know ihat ite the war the cost oi living is going down. The depart ment of labor keeps close tab om Jirices throughoys the whole of Uan- ada and their review of the situation thows that there has' heen a consid: MO ST PERFECT MADE "| MAKES LIGHT sien in Mr, Angell.. The ideal epared ate will have tu supplement wih lirge quantities of william snd-of Tolstol, His iosistegce in subjection, - It is not Germany or another who will bold the placa in tha sum. It I= He whose right it is to rule. Mr. MacNell takes a long view of history, and a large view of humanity, and he rerogaolzes the {n- disputable suprbmsary of Jesus Chrisi, who will come to is own at the tes. mination of this gresy war. =~ These are thrilling sermons of great force, apd wonderfully alive to the apiritua: Hottual, 0b hat to-day prices as a needs of the world ih its present eris- 1 choly are almost identical with a is. . - year ago. Articles which have recent- WHOLESOME BREAD. | 1 erable drop diring the past couple of manthsa, Pring he aT ORTET pre- i viotis to the outhreak of war thers ii kad been a sag in prices. The declar- : . ii ation of hostilities, with its complete | ) Jail ¢ ' i disturbance of business and its unset i il tling conditions, was immediately iol- lowed by a jump. This Kept Hp ior a couple: of months, but since thea prices have beer gradually going back to ------ | By Norman Angell, pp. xlviii. 28. | Toronto, Willlam Briggs, S01. "Kingston, R. Uglow & Co, | upon ihe, economies motive {3 fre- Thi collection of essays, delivered | quently¥inlsipading and 48 some- Frior to the war, loosely united by-agtinies nn aggravating _ Attempt to comprehensive prefaca, expresse i truth for the whole. "pacificist ideas of which | 5 are oftén sound and vents consumption and cures « il is the exponent. There is The hatred w ah ness. 'Tightowss across the chest, painbe-} | something very saddening in reading RB ssaalled i the tween the sho , hackip gz cough, sor to which the present state of | influence. 11.0 theoat, asthma and bronchitis are the seems so emphatically t ==W.L.G. foe Spe. icles gan ailments which, in particular," Peps hive But' though the war i - = ar . raps ngage ow +] I¥ Robe down in price are mea 3 been designed to cure, Peps wil soon Angell 10 reshape o | RECOLLECTIONS AND RECORDS | THE CHILDREN'S STORY OF THE | snimal products, furs, textiles, druga and your bad cold. , his message of peace, and OF TORONTO 'OF OLD. WAR. and chemicals. On the other hand the Testimonials for Peps have been given waste and destruction of war, | past month has seen an increase in the by members of the Canadian Parliament, only be the mors necessary. Ii price of grains, fodder, dairy pro- doctoss, lawyers, emineat Canadian is tothe credit of the author's cour duets, fish and hides. musicians ; all going 10 prove that Pe age that one of his essays, 'on *"I'he Sm ------------ Baye been found a cure {or throat need for reitatement of certain prin FA : chest trouble; often when offer ciples, arid the grounds for enquiry," LORD HARDINGE'S SORROWS. remedies had entirely failed. was delivered -to a number of univer FREE ARIAL Cut om bi ? sity Audiences jin Germany, : turn postage ) to Peps Co, Dupont 8 Mr. 'Anfell's thesis is that just a Travia snd we wiil send you s treed | (ho usa, of force has gradually ben and stones sell Pose. sic rr 8) dropped by civilised man in his pri $L.25. Jee the mmo vate disputes, just a the world has apy Hoos vu gradually outgrown the private 'war uly ontore Surin vhich was. the curse of the Middle Ages, so the common sense of man- kind: should abandon the ise of force a4 a suitable method of expressing the national consciousyess and the na- tional pell-interest. ' Mr. Angell is not a Tolstoi; he admits the usefulness of ol whether. to police undevelop ed peoples, or as a means of national sell-defenca, against anprincipled neigh: bors; but hb pleads nat without elo: quence for a higher way : "I believe that war js what Mr Bonar | Law has called it: the failure of hu-| mediately tor breathed down the inflamed ai iho the Jungs, direct Peps mediciae tak vapor, and ues oc Head lang troubles, jos ; woods dnd resting ir pre- well n est! a nkiive, ch he has heen est proct of lia | §7 Ry Sic Edward Parrott, Thomas Nei: son & Sons, Toronto, Publishers. Ninstrated. Hundreds of hooks have heen writ: ten for adnits, all bearing upon some phase of the present great war, It Is quite approprizis, therefore, ih some gifted writer should ron the children and'place in their Wanda 2 book in whick the story of thelV world-wide confl'ct would he told in a simple and Inieresting manner, This Is exaetly what Sir Rdward Par: rott han done, and done admirably, Many eduneationial authorities fa various paric of the world have de- eided to give instruction in the pub- lic schools as to the origin, causes and events of the war. For this pur. pose "The Childran's Stoby of fhe War" will be found invaluable. The author has had great experience in writiag for children, and his schoel books are vepy widely and favorably known. This book will tell how the War arose, why Britain came fo taka part in the contest, and gives a con- wounds received in action against tinuous marrative of all the great ev- the CGetmans in Franoe. ents in the struggle, dwelling mainly « Bdward Hardinge was a "partioul on those in¢ldents of 'heroism ang A arly good-looking yeung fellow of self-sacrifice which specially appeal two #nd twenty a godson of Princess Dt ay. the same time, and Victoria and who bad inherited much terest of the story, it will supply ait| Of bia father's charm and mang that historical and geographical in- Jud iol bis Jastinating aud. popula i O ' g n mother's musica L, R ¥- {imation neceamary to a proper un hood lie was a page of honor to King derstanding of the subject. ) The bodk will appear first in wdek- | Edward, received his commission in the spring of 1511 and wan the dis- ly parts, which may be bound up when the book is complete. Fach | tlagulshed service order for conspie- art conglate of sixteen pages, clear | uous gallantry under fire duping the y printed on geod paper,with all the | last week of August necessary maps and plenty of illne- His next brother, Alexander Har- trations. The cover is dark green | dinge, a godson of Queen Alexander, 20 years of age, atid also at the front Jober, .and the price of each par: is i In France, now hécomes next heir to 0 cents, Parénts who wish their children to become-familiar with tae his father's 'Barony 'of Hardinge of Penshurst, which was héstowed upon true story -of the war should make Sir Charles Hardinge, former am- Sure. of securing the first and each subsequent part. of this. valuable | passador to Russia, and under secre- book tary"for foreign affairs on the ooeas- wo A BORAPOF PAPER. ion of his appointment to the vice- royalty of India. ; By Dr. E.J.: Dillon. Published For| The 18tter Is a magnificent office, The Daily = Telegraph; London, with princely 'emoluments, perhaps the most distinguished™oMee to which By Hodder ® Stoughton, London and Toronto. a subject of the British crown can : aspire But fong its dW hadia t Is that of the disability of its holder ts, ate hbtter_ qusifited io ta Jeave India while his term lasts, this war than Dr. Dillon, His jon-|n0 matter what happens. and close connection with affairs in He could not quit India on leave, the Balkans makes him a recognizea| save by the passage of a special act | 8uthority on conditions in the Near|of parliament granting him a fur- Bast. 'In taking as the title of his] lough. Falling this, the abandoh- book the German Chancellors' fam- ous charncterization of the Belgian ment of his post, be it for ever so brief a period, entails, by stature, its neutrality 'treaty--*'A Scrap of Pap- er'-- Dr. Dillon declares that the forfeiture. Nor, would any officer |' of the English crown, especially 'gne phrase 'Is destined to stick like a one so patriotic and high-minded as Nessus' shirt to the memory of its Lord Hardinge, dréam of abandon- author, his imperial inspirer, ana thelr country until such time as tae ing his post of duty while his coun- try is t roes of reat war militarism which originated it has T¥ 1s In the throes of a grea been consumed without residue." ------------ The book reveals the inner work- Story of Germans Surrendering Inge of German diplomacy. Dr. A prominent Canadian rallway of- Dillon lays special stress upon the » ¥ ficial in London spent his Christmus fact that the German diplomats, | a, the seaside. At his hotel were a While conversant with every super-|ponber of British officers home from fieial and obvious-condiffon in each the front on leave. One of them of the nations with whom they con- told him the following amazing story. templated galng to war, were wholly | Recently, during one of the engage- unable to realize the state of the na- ments some Germans were taken pri- tion's soul. this materialism having) sonars. Oné of the prisoners was proved their undoing. The author I fhe prisoners wa James McParland, an elderly man who sought his finds that Germany has been and is captors to let him go hack to the Ger- wholly in the wrong, and that it Distrib man trenches and bring back his son . utor. would-be hard to imagine a worse with him. The English soldiers mim mim case than that with which she Is fore: | laughed at the idea, and said that 6d to go before the judgment of the they had no guarantee that t- world. "Brutal force, In the form, | or, SUaIantie that 1a¢ ian v " 5 new social gospel: of the Hohenzollerns, the last word of Teutonic culture," The book ably reviews 'the cireums stances leading up to 'the war ama the subsequent events, and throws By W. H. Pearson, Toronto, William Briggs, 1914. pp. 272. Price, $2.00. Toronto ia well off for compilers of her «aly records Not. cnly is { there Dr. J, Ross Robertson's *Land- marks of Toronto," now runhing to six large quarto volumes, but we hive lesser works, such as Dr, Scad- @lng's "Toronto of Old." Yet there wis a. place for the present book, The author was a clerk in the Toron- to post office from 1847 to 1864, and has ever since resided in Teranto, He has kept a diggy and a seran hook ever since 18463, and his pleasant ana kindly - reminiscences throw distinct light on early conditions Chnpres XIX deals with Kingston, where he lived from 18 11-1842 'The popula: tion of our eify was at. that time a little over 6,000. "I was-mueh impressed wishes the large number of boats In the harbor. Tiere were scores of barges, eithep man, wisdom; that jue Shployment of being loaded or unloaded, and the ice a3 bfiween fie eliminated from | BUMerous French Canadians as well human intercourse in two ways: by |as their barge men belonging to them confronting force on pRe [Side wate created qujte- an animated reone py LM RL BE BR That way is | While they" were engaged at thelr ithe soldier's way. However costly, | Work. There were numerovs fow dangerous and burdensome it may be | boats, a number of schooners and {i may Be the hgcessary price of luman quits i few Steamers in the ha Thor. way: by the growing realization, on John Counter, baker, was mayo: the part of those "who provoks | the of Kingston at that time, and it was Ppouhuforen. hat dt ia inefleth Ro largely, 1 think, through his influ- and piecemeal enlargement of under. |€nce that the Clty Hall was bulin When I visited Kingston many. years after, I met Mr. Counter at the rési- dence of his son-in-law, and In re- standing on this subject." (P. 161.) This is a noble idea, and one which ferring to the City Hall he sald, with a good deal of complaceney, "The will have again and again to be re- stated after the present war, when the victory of the allies will seem to many to have gloriously justified the | people all say that was the house way of the soldier. But Mr. Angell is | tHat Jack. built' * + a Cannot some of our own citizens be .induced- to commit their earsy memories to paper ? less persuasive when. he tries to prove deni ci bins HOW ARMIES FIGHT. the impotence of force. In so deing he frequently uses Canada as an illis- tration : Germany might acquire Canada, but eine: J | SE ahton Enda wear upto fo oo and on: gf her taking in ahy other form to the | BY "Ubique', Thonins Nelson & Sona, 1t ¢lusion of other nations. London and Toronto, Publishers . any 'own" Canada, Price, 80¢ rs have to own it dn the same way rrice, . i "How Armies Fight" is a re<pubii- cation, In cheap form, of a hook oan ed "Modern Warfare," first isaned in 1893, and then, as now, published anonymously. It deseribes u- sup- posed war between England. France and Belgium, on the one side, and we do; the Germans would have EME brining, pack thy r k of wheat and ever hich Germany on the other. The Organis zation of a modern army and {ts op enith ound of beef that they might buy, fosy hut of .h w fat a8 though Canada "belonged" to reat Br erations in the field are desertbed in popuiar laasusnge. Curiously an. itain or to anybody else. Gar- many could not even have the meagre satisfaction of Germaniiing these réat communities, for one . knows hat they are far. too firmly "set." Their language, law, morals, would Ve to. be, after German conquest, What they are now. Germany woil find that the German Canada was pretty much the Canada that {t is now-- & country where Germans are free to 0. and do go, which is now a field for | OUgh, the author takes it for granted rmany's éxpanding . population. | that Germany will invade France ) through Belgium, and that the Brie tish expeditionary force, which op- erates in Belgium, is led by Kiteuen- er and French. When fis Joh was originally published, at the close of the South as. Spain of old did from her colo- African war, the late Lord Roberts ides, she could by manipulation of wrote: - "It conveys a great deal of the tariff, by pressure upon Cana- practical instruction' in a very. please dian manufacturers, by laying - ber | ant way, and "at the same tims (n a Band upon Canadian - universities, graphic way to impress it upon the ete, get for herself a larger Propor- | memory. The maps and dite ams tion of Canada's wealth, were Cana> illustrating the text are excellent. 1 da a conquered province, than she expect to hear that the book is wide. could from Canada as an autonom- ly read, and 1 believe it bas a specia; Ous British colony. Mr. Angell may value for officers and 'men of {he au. reply, as a free-trader, that the to- xillary forces." tal amount she would get would be Lo 3 less, but at least the proportion Would be greater. The second and deeper fallacy 1& his minimising of the results on Canada of a German conquest. Not lightly does one, break the spirit of a people. Tt is doubtful whether the south of Fng- land has yet got over the Norman Conquest. Not for centuries Will the IS MILD, PURE. APPETIZING Just the Beverage for the busy man:-- rests thé nerves and ensures sound sleep. Viceroy of Ina, Loses Fldest Son in War. Much sympathy will go out to the iceroy of India. For he had secar- eely recovered from the dangerous wounds which he had recelved in the aitempt made to assassinate him by means of an explosive bonib when making his. state entry inte Delhi Inst winter on elephant-back. when he wus plunged inte mourning by the death In England of his wife, who succumbed ln.July last to an opera- tion for which she had heen obliged 10 return home, leaving him In India at his post of duty. And now comes the eews of the death of his eldest son, Lieutenant the Hon. Edward Hardinge, of the 16th Hussars, at Folkestone, from If not sold in your rcighborhood, write \ JOHN LABATT, LIMITED LONDON CANADA BEF Special arrangements tor direct "shipment ers, "SOWARDS ( Keep Coal and Coal Keeps SOWARDS The Glow of Perfeet Health may yet be yours ! ; O matter how weakened your condition by sick- neps, overwork, mental strain or other causes, if there is no organic disease, the tone and stren; Junich fect of PURITAN BOYS Da' When 123 ed magn Eoanl outfls 06 4 outfit, rend vi RES LUEL? TRE Somplels, consisting of a pair of | * J4 strong. polished glee], hockey skates fall bisoe'. | J gucd {ively puck. and & strony, well made rock elm npr aiak: Sd in Saiiian aves EA aan ire aan oxi 3 Pale of wall pa ay gloves Pugors: nan Ly edna apliote Sover Po mall Jud 30 handsome boities of aur de. Sral Faganess Portirme 10 Ball Mook Fons teoomas slonly 10 cents a boitie. Bix different odore-- While Rose Arcading Violet, Lilae. Carnatic, Hello. trove, eic; no irsubie ut all 10 sll; everybody wants iwaor thee bottise, You will sell thera! in 4h Bods. Then rete rn our $3. and you will rece! ve ot oboe, a Leote AR bayei We iTabss to Sant a ous ouidi righd 10 Fons door wa aad we will plea. Y ~betores cu te ooh. " L MANUFACTURING CO. DEPT, MW, 154 TORONTO, ONT, A A A AA AA ny For sharpening the appetite and stimu. lating the digestive organa generally, you will find nothing to equal Wolfe's Schnapps. Tale it a3 a "toddy" with hot water, sugar, lemon and a wine. glass of Wolfe's; with ginger beer, aerated waters; the result is the same; you will always find Wolfe's Schnapps the greatest tonic energiser fur the vital organs, Vastly superior to ordinary gin, There is here a double fallacy, The firgt is that of the Excluded Middle, as it 18 cailed in the books of logic. While Germany could not of course exact tribute from Canada L.A CosyRoom Requires a Suitable Light { WE HAVE ll kinds and colors of glass globes for united gas Hehe, swith 'fringe. and . plain, from | A8e.ap, Gas Dome yr A stortment of Domes ut 3.00, $0.00 8750 Sagaer $12.50 and $22.00, Come in and see them. Obtainable at all Hotels and Retail Stores, Axiiralia none cone suwined near 2 $060,000 oliies last ORLD POWER. ] ------ By Rev, John MacNeill, of Waliner Road Baptist Church, Toronto, Meglelland, Goodchild & Ste. wart, Toronto, Publishers, A volume of sermons, we are bound to admit, is public is .inclined to fight shy of. Here, however, is the ox. ception that proves the rule. Viewed from any angle, this book is worthy of high recommendation. These ----------d ----t Aa We are Sole Agents In Kingston For the Genuine Hurd Hockey Boots, The Boot that all the Best: Clubs Use, | $5.00 a Pair. go. . However, the man persisted with his request, and It was thonght that even if We did not come back, no great harm would be one, as he Was not a young man. Good nature and curiosity prevailed, and th sermons, some of them delivered in | Some new light upon German me- was allowed to £0. Ina short time England and some from his own pull thods of diplomacy. ¢ . | he returned, not only with his son, - - - - but with some 50 Germans, all eag- 34 ging I RE er to be 1s , ior localities of Japan, away from the COST OF WAR IN SHOES trenches --- ervey n es Jeaten track 2 tourist traffic, you Sete : w compelled to pay even a high | Bint Dollars Figh Goes er rate of exchange, as the Jap a on nr Years. Sig Noes thants refuse to accept for. Springfield Repiblican In exchange for their wares unless! Never in the history of the world they are easiliy accessible to Bome | was there anything comparable to nearby seaport town. i the sudden demand for shoes whieh The Jap nickel, or five 'sen piece, | has been created by the war. Jom Will buy five or six times as much! Hanan, the New York shoe manufac. for a Jap in his own country as the turer, who is now in Eurepe on same value of currency 'would buy) business, is quoted in a cable des. for an Amerlean home in the United patch from Paris as saying that the States. e simplicity of the native demand for army hosts is 80,060,009 currency Sytem goes Mand in hand [Pairs a year. The figures -seem with the frugality and the wise aco nomies of these quaint, active tittle Philadelphia = North Ame- of servility and ferocity which In large part the result of Turkish Tule. To Break the spirit of Cane ada by German conquest would be to make Canada useless to the world for centuries, 9 a 850. are JAPANESE MONEY Yens, Sens and Rivs Complete Their Simple Currency System. The Japanese current system is very simple and is based upon a gold basis. The ualt of value is a yen. This equals 50 cents in gold, aeree. {ng to our United States values, One yan is divided into 100 sen. Each of the latter is worth just one-half an American cent. The Japanese sen Is the equivalent of 10 rin, apd the sinailest Japanese coin 'éon of a five rin piece, the equivalent of American penny. The currency media is composed of paper notes, silver, nickel and OL { tiean. per. The Japs have their paper mo-| = ney in one, five, ten yen notes and upward. The silver money cpmes in ten, twenty and Afty sen pieces. The smallest nieke! piece is valued at. 5 sen. Then: comes the sen, 1 sen, and 4 rin, I ; This is substance of the entire cur- rency system in Japan when you stdp into a money changers to fHro- etre the coin of the realm. you do not always obtain thie equiva- lent in values for your American cur réncy. The va seaport | S357 wi Chinese money : Donald's Criticism Donald was an old Scotch beadie who officiated in a highland Rirk where the minister, never a bright Star at any time, believed in long, rambling sermons. A str er onee asked him his opinion of the ser- mons. "Ah, weel," replied Donald "you'll no' get me io say anything against them, for they're a' very guid; but I'll just remark this much: "The beginning's faye ower far {rae the end, and it wad greatly im- Prove the force of it if he left oot 2' that com in atween.' ee ---- Bell Silent 76 Years, After remaluing practically wnus- ed in the belfry of the Phoenix Hall Eaten ven Sor 2 Jars, the bell 4 Was placed there in 1792 is to puch Iferast %) the Jiscavéry by be moved to a schoolhouse in North Rothe exea &, party iy 'Fairhaved,- and there used for both of a age canal at Ophel, in Jeru- : the school and for ihe fire alarm RY TC glen i Eb ring a ae ame Si "ry Mote i T'd certainty give most anything to able to fat oe A few pounds and stay o way 8 every excessively i mosaibier Gentle Shae TLE espite pas 8, people are victims hr mal-nitels on. which ments af provents the foo from Detng t - t n Seve e blood as they are When {he var Af natrition are normal, > nate: £4 ting into the blood, mil _* the fat An esh producing Slenan 5 So gh Tha od as wast y et one-quarter of an eit rect this condition and to pro- dvs u healthy, normal Amount of it ta piste 3 @ power which | them, Fain can yooomplished eating & Sargoi tab. | moat, Sarial ne nbihg tion of six o The vo W-glving, : nto th until | ®, -------------------- Water Canal Famous. fat-producing mani i NLD duets Archaelogists are ifesti meal it. mixes with foed the sugars and starches into nourishment for the tigsues its rapid effect is pe Bh TY A aie 8 om i intrednent. Yet jis fi canal of King Hezekiah. It was ajse on a different land level. The dis covery throws some light on the ears ly water supply of Jerusalem. + The a4 excavations are sti in